Fichte's Foundations of natural right : a critical guide /
This Guide examines Fichte's main political concepts including morality, the summons, social contract, freedom, the body and human rights.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Cambridge :
Cambridge University Press,
2016.
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Colección: | Cambridge critical guides.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover; Half title; Series information; Title page; Copyright information; Table of contents; List of contributors; Acknowledgments; List of abbreviations; Introduction; I; II; III; 1 Fichte's Foundations of Natural Right and its Relation to Kant; Fichte's Doctrine of Right and the Idea of the "Practical"; The "Deduction" of the Concept of Right and the Individuality of Self-Consciousness; Kant's Practical Philosophy: Transcendental Foundation and Metaphysical Application; The Universal Law of Right and the Highest Principle of Morality; 2 Fichte's Separation of Right from Morality.
- Personhood Personhood as the Foundation of Right; The Significance of Separating Right from Morality; 3 Fichte's Independence Thesis; The Dependence Thesis; The Derivation of the Concept of a Right in General; The Derivation of the Distinction between Inalienable and Alienable Rights; The Independence Thesis; The Deduction of the Concept of Right; The Rejection of the Dependence Thesis; The Independence Thesis and the Separation Thesis; 4 Deduction of the Summons and the Existence of Other Rational Beings; Fichte's Synthetic Method of Transcendental Philosophy.
- The Starting Point of the Deduction Deduction of the Object of Present Free Action; Deduction of the Summons; Inference to Other Rational Beings as the Cause of the Summons; The Summons to Rational Activity as Education or Upbringing (Erziehung); The Summons as the Ground of Individuality; 5 Fichte's Kabbalistic Realism: Summons as z.imz.um; What's the Problem?; Kabbalistic Realism as Desideratum; Vicious and Virtuous Circles; Violence, Communicative Action, and Normativity; Conclusion: Anti-Semitism and Nihilism; 6 Fichte's Developmental View of Self-Consciousness.
- The Pure I and the Individual I Human Beings, Individuality, and the Interrelationist Tradition; Elementary Recognition and the Developmental View; Nature, Reason, and Development; Conclusion; 7 The Body as Site of Action and Intersubjectivity in Fichte's Foundations of Natural Right; "I" as First Principle of Knowledge and Action; The Summons as Medium of Freedom; Expressing Mutual Recognition; Conclusion: The Human Body; 8 Fichte's Transcendental Deduction of Private Property; A Fichtean Critique of Locke; "Here Lies the Ground of All Property Rights."
- Fichtean Work and the Self-Positing Gambit A Tale of Two Emperors; The Deductive Strategy; Two Outstanding Problems; 9 Fichte on Personal Freedom and the Freedom of Others; Right and Recognition; The Conditional Nature of Right; Right and Freedom; 10 Freedom, Coercion, and the Relation of Right; The Hegelian Objection; The Relation of Right in Natural Right 4; Self-Limitation; Reciprocity; Expression; Freedom; The Relation of Right: Three Contexts; The Summons; The Civil Contract as Reciprocal Recognition; Rightful Relations Among Citizens; Critical Assessment and Conclusion.